Ryan Gattis is the author of Safe, Kung Fu High School, and All Involved, which won the American Library Association's Alex Award and the Lire Award for Noir of the Year in France. He lives and writes in South Los Angeles, where he is a member of art collective UGLARworks, a founding board member of arts non-profit Heritage Future, and a PEN America Prison Writing Mentor.
Pacy, immersive and vivid, with strong characterisation and no punches pulled, this is an utterly riveting read -- Laura Wilson * Guardian * 'It is superb. It's weighty, authentic to its bone marrow, questioning and thoughtful . . . I am in awe of Gattis's plotting, characters, sense of pace and most of all his ear for language and diction and dialect . . . The System reinvigorates my idea of what fiction is capable of being.' -- David Mitchell, author of <i>Cloud Atlas</i> Gripping, meticulously-researched and smartly-plotted, I devoured this brilliant novel over the course of a weekend. -- Paula Hawkins, author of <i>The Girl on the Train</i> The book is the fruit of six years' research and there are all sorts of details that ring true . . . the most compelling courtroom drama I have read this year. -- Jake Kerridge, <i>Sunday Telegraph</i>, Novel of the Week The novel follows Ryan Gattis's previous books in sketching a portrait of Nineties LA to sit alongside that of James Ellroy's depiction of it in the Forties . . . so finely nuanced are the individual voices and so visceral in particular are the scenes of prison life, with its hierarchies and fault lines, that the writing accumulates a heft that forces you to care -- Thriller of the Month * The Times * A crime novel and a novel of social criticism . . . the trial scenes which occupy the last third of the novel are excellent, lucid, intelligent and utterly gripping . . . One should add that this is possible only because the groundwork had been well laid by intelligent and cunning plotting . . . The System is a crime novel and a thriller, but, like the best in the genre, is invites you to think as well as feel -- Allan Massie * Scotsman * A muscular, rousing tale of injustice, systemic racism and the desperation of those chunks of urban America abandoned by local and national government * Metro * The System is a tour de force . . . It is a page-turner, but one you will want to read slowly in order to savor every gorgeous sentence . . . Ryan Gattis is a magician. -- David Dow, author of <i>Confessions of an Innocent Man</i> I relate so much to this book, it's painful . . . That's how real this novel is . . . Front to back, it's not just an incredible work, it's an experience. -- Gustavo<i> </i> Goose Alvarez, author of <i>The Pawn</i> The System's panoramic approach-eschewing one main character for a whole set of people associated with a crime-sets it apart . . . A tale of redemption, an examination of loyalty and a love song for family bonds. -- Patrick Hoffman, author of <i>Clean Hands</i> The System is an odyssey through the legal system . . . The dialogue isn't dialogue; it's what you'd actually hear - on the street, in a courtroom, on the prison yard. -- Joe Ide, author of the IQ series Gripping, fascinating, moving, and so very, very real. The System is one of the best books I've read in years. -- Marcia Clark, author of <i>Final Judgment </i>and former Criminal Prosecutor Ryan Gattis ingeniously casts deeply researched novels of social protest as page-turning crime fiction . . . This book blew my mind. -- Dan Slater, author of <i>Wolf Boys: Two American Teenagers</i> The System is as real as it gets - often brutal, but a beautifully written reality of not only life on the street, but also getting caught up or working in the justice system. -- David Swinson, author of <i>The Second Girl</i>